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Issue 1078 coverCentury of Rickettsiology: Emerging, Reemerging Rickettsioses, Molecular Diagnostics, and Emerging Veterinary Rickettsioses Volume 1078 published October 2006
Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1078: 176–179 (2006). doi: 10.1196/annals.1374.126
Copyright © 2006 by the New York Academy of Sciences
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Part I. Epidemiology of Rickettsial Disease

Serologic Study of Rickettsioses among Acute Febrile Patients in Central Tunisia

N KAABIAa, J.M ROLAINb, M KHALIFAa, E. BEN JAZIAa, F BAHRIa, D RAOULTb AND A LETAÏEFa

a Internal Medicine and Infectious Diseases Unit, CHU F, Hached Sousse Tunisia b Unité des Rickettsies, CNRS UMR 6020, Faculté de Médecine Marseille-France

Key Words: rickettsia • epidemiology • Q fever • bartonella • ehrlichia • Tunisia

Address for correspondence: Amel Letaief, Service de Médecine Interne et Maladies Infectieuses, CHU F, Hached-Sousse 4000 Tunisia. Voice/fax: +216-73-21-11-83.  e-mail: amel.letaief{at}famso.rnu.tn

Although Mediterranean spotted or "boutonneuse" fever (MSF) has been documented in central Tunisia, other spotted fever group rickettsioses (SFGR) and typhus group rickettsioses (TGR) have received little attention in our region. We sought to determine the role of rickettsioses, Q fever, ehrlichioses, and bartonelloses among patients with acute fever. The results of this study of 47 persons with acute fever of undetermined origin are reported in this paper. We concluded that SFGR, murine typhus, and acute Q fever are common causes of acute isolate fever in summer in central Tunisia and should be investigated systematically in patients with acute fever of unknown origin.






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